Tag Archives: Art & Design

After Hours

The Ohio Arts Council’s Riffe Gallery will be hosting an exhibit of cubical dweller’s art next spring (2017) and I’m honored to announce that I had a piece accepted to be in the show. This gallery is a block from my day-job and is a place of respite and meditation for me – particularly in the midst of especially stressful work days. As such, I was very happy to get the news today that I would have a piece of work adorning the same walls I’ve viewed so many wonderful, thoughtful and challenging pieces in the past.

Circumvolution 1 Circumvolution 2

Sometimes I make things without words

14753225_10101331327551217_5142944816878910798_oMy wife, Gail, works in communications for an inner-ring municipality next to Columbus, and is tasked with significantly more than merely communicating information to the residents. She helps find people food and shelter, heat, Christmas gifts; she runs very successful events like a Food Truck Festival, National Night Out,  TEDx, and much of the Fourth of July celebration. The list could go on forever if I took the time. Really, if it weren’t for her, the city would be struggling not only to tell the story of it’s positive efforts, but would struggle to even accomplish those positive efforts in the first place.

Given that this municipality has a significant population living in poverty or on poverty’s edge, Gail’s efforts hold more weight than they might elsewhere. Not only through what I listed above; but in particular, how she’s used her communications training to do a 180 on the stories being told on the news and in social media about Whitehall. No longer is it the go to label for stories about crime and tragedy, instead the story is about community improvement efforts such as the Home Reinvestment Program and the multi-year selection by Rebuilding Together Central Ohio to help make neighborhood improvements through corporate sponsorship and volunteer efforts. It’s a story about new business investment and a place of opportunity for a diverse population of residents and visitors. It’s like an old friend who for years was a downer to be around but they found their sunshine and now their presence is infectious.

So that is why I want to do whatever I can to be in support of her. This is why I brag on Gail so much. This is what brings me to sharing my little project below.

For this year’s Whitehall Halloween celebration Gail wanted to do something new.

I hope the kids and families participating will enjoy imagining themselves as something a little different as well as framing themselves in the Halloween spirit while showing off their costumes. Of course we needed to give them a test ourselves just to be sure!

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Central Ohioans turn wood from ash trees into memorable works

Columbus Dispatch article By Ken Gordon on my piece in the “Beyond Limbs & Leaves: Rekindling UA Ash” art exhibit.

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/life_and_entertainment/2015/08/27/1-risen-ashes.html

 

For the first time in years, ash trees won’t make Steve Cothrel sad.

The superintendent of parks and forestry for the city of Upper Arlington has overseen the removal of more than 1,000 ash trees — cut down either as victims of the emerald ash borer or in a pre-emptive attempt to prevent the spread of the bug.

“It has been no fun, because I’ve known a lot of these trees for decades,” said Cothrel, a 26-year city employee.

“It has been really unpleasant for all involved.”

Because of that history, he is looking forward to a reception tonight at the Upper Arlington Municipal Services Center to celebrate the exhibit “Beyond Limbs & Leaves: Rekindling UA Ash.”

The show, through Oct. 23, includes the works of 10 central Ohio artists who were asked to imagine ways in which the ash wood could be brought back to life.

“The biggest contrast for me,” Cothrel said, “is that I will be in a room full of people who are feeling very positive about ash trees.”

A transplant from Asia, the borer burrows specifically into ash trees — resulting in the destruction of water- and nutrient-carrying tissue under the bark.

The suburb came up with a plan to deal with the ash borer in 2006, Cothrel said, and the insect arrived by 2009.

As trees were felled by the hundreds, Upper Arlington officials began talking about whether something positive might rise from the ashes.

Then, by 2012, the idea for an art exhibit had been finalized.

Artists were given pieces of wood — which might need several years of drying before it is carved.

“We wanted to display how ash could be seen in different ways by different eyes,” said Lynette Santoro-Au, manager of the Upper Arlington Cultural Arts Division.

The results are diverse.

Traditional woodworkers Paul Courtright of Delaware and Bruce Kerns of Pickerington, for example, created bowls, plates and containers of various shapes and styles.

Jake Seabaugh of Canal Winchester — who steams strips of wood, then bends them into shapes — produced a piece of wall art depicting a wooden daisy “growing” out of an ash log.

Other artists used the fate of the ash trees as a metaphor.

Upper Arlington resident Andrew Miller, employed in the information-technology field, makes wooden furniture and does freelance writing in his free time.

When he accepted the invitation to join the effort, he intended to make a piece of furniture.

Instead, amid the drying wood, he changed plans and wrote an essay — part of which he put on glass and embedded in an ash log marked by the twisting paths of ash-borer tunnels.

“The essay is about how we all have these things we do in life that are destructive,” Miller said. “And we tend to look at the emerald ash borer as destructive. But if you take time to look at it, it is a beautiful bug, as bugs go, and the patterns it makes are kind of amazing.”

One of the most prominent pieces was contributed by Catherine Bell Smith of Upper Arlington.

On a large wood-and-metal table, she placed 130 chalices — representing the 130 ash trees felled in Thompson Park.

Inside the chalices are ash-tree seedpods. Inlaid in the center of the table is a piece of slate in which is carved a cross, with a bit of ash wood inside.

The piece, patterned after an altar, is titled Sacrificial Offering.

“The whole idea of sacrificing healthy trees to prevent the spread is a very Christian sort of thing,” said Smith, who calls herself “a recovering Catholic.”

“For me, to take the seeds, place them in a chalice and have them on an altar is really a metaphor for what we’ve tried to do to prevent this terrible spread of emerald ash borer.”

In addition to the seeds in the chalices, Smith put seed packets in a box accompanying her installation.

Visitors are invited to take packets home.

“Hopefully, someday, they may be able to replant,” Smith said.

“And, if nothing else, we’ll have the seeds to remember . . . (the trees) by.”

Beyond Limbs & Leaves: Rekindling UA Ash

August 20-October 23

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In an effort to remember the Ash trees felled by the Emerald Ash Borer in Ohio, the City of Upper Arlington’s Concourse Gallery invited artists around Ohio to create a piece or two showcasing the characteristics of ash wood. We started with ash trees from Upper Arlington and contacted local artists to create something that will last far beyond ash trees in our community.  Thank you to the following artists whose work will be on view:  Michael Keith; Andi Wolfe; Michael Hughes; Paul Courtright; Dennis DeVendra; Marcus Rumer; Tim Cooper; Bruce Kerns; Andrew Miller; Laura Gorun; Ed Miller; Jake Seabaugh, Timothy Staton and Cathering Bell Smith.

– See more at: http://www.uaoh.net/department/division.php?structureid=335#sthash.H3w1mpY6.dpuf

I will update photos when the piece is actually hung. The essay this piece is built around will be part of my forthcoming collection being published by Civil Coping Mechanisms, scheduled for release May 2016.

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